City Building Permits

El Segundo, CA Building Permit Guide

How to apply for a building permit in El Segundo, California. Permit authority, application steps, fees, and inspection requirements.

California Los Angeles County Updated March 2026

Permit Authority

Handles building permits within the incorporated City of El Segundo. Separate approvals may also be required from other City divisions or agencies for zoning, public works/encroachment, fire, health, or utility-related work.

Department
City of El Segundo Community Development Department, Building and Safety Division
Address
350 Main Street, El Segundo, CA 90245
Phone
310-524-2380

Online Permit Portal

Platform: OpenGov EZ Permit Hub • Account required: Yes • Submission: In-person only

Application Process

  1. Identify the permit type and gather the required plans and supporting documents. El Segundo publishes project-specific packets and a general document submittal list covering architectural, structural, MEP, grading, Title 24, soils/geology, and material specifications.
  2. Submit the permit application or inquiry through the EZ Permit Hub. For work that qualifies as an express permit, the City states online express permits can be issued when the work does not require plan review.
  3. Respond to plan-check comments and provide any additional approvals or documents required for the project type. The City publishes separate packets/handouts for new single-family, new commercial, additions, change of use, food establishments, block walls, and other categories.
  4. Pay assessed permit and plan-check fees before permit issuance. El Segundo's Master Fee Schedule uses valuation-based building fees for many projects and separate trade-fee schedules for electrical, plumbing, and mechanical permits.
  5. Schedule inspections during construction, then complete all final conditions before sign-off. For applicable projects, construction waste-management documentation must be provided before final inspection, and the City states it will not issue a CO or TCO without complete documentation.
  6. If a permit or application needs more time, use the City's Request for Modification or Extension of Permit form. Local code states plan-check applications are deemed abandoned 12 months after filing unless extended, and refund rules apply separately.

Typical processing time: No general public turnaround time is posted on the current City pages reviewed. The 2025 code update notice directs applicants to contact Building and Safety for plan-check turnaround times. Express permits are available only for work that does not require plan review.

Source: City of El Segundo Community Development Department, Building and Safety Division

General Requirements

El Segundo enforces the California Building Standards Code as locally amended. Permits are generally required for construction, alteration, repair, demolition, grading, and regulated electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work unless specifically exempt. Starting work before permit issuance triggers an additional fee equal to 100% of the normal permit fee, or other amount determined by the Building Official.

Required Documents

  • Common submittals include architectural plans with plot/floor/roof plans and elevations, structural plans, grading plans when applicable, landscaping plans, plumbing/mechanical/electrical plans, structural calculations signed by the responsible professional, Title 24 energy forms, soil report/geologic hazard study when applicable, hazardous-material inventory information, and material specifications. Project-specific packets may require more.
Permit validity
El Segundo publishes a permit-extension form. Local code states permit applications/plan check are deemed abandoned 12 months after filing unless extended in writing; permit-fee refunds are generally unavailable after 12 months from permit issuance. Inference: active permits should be monitored closely and extended before lapse rather than relying on refund rights.
Building code
Effective January 1, 2026, El Segundo adopted the 2025 California Building Code, Residential Code, Electrical Code, Mechanical Code, Plumbing Code, Fire Code, Energy Code, Green Building Standards Code, Existing Building Code, Historical Building Code, Administrative Code, Wildland-Urban Interface Code, plus the 2024 International Swimming Pool and Spa Code and 2024 International Property Maintenance Code, all with local amendments. Applications deemed complete by December 31, 2025 may remain under the prior 2022 code cycle if they do not expire.
Owner-builder
The City publishes a "Who Can Pull A Permit" handout and homeowner guidance. Where an owner-builder seeks the permit, expect owner acknowledgment/responsibility documentation consistent with California owner-builder rules.
Contractor requirements
Contractors performing work for which a CSLB license is required must hold the appropriate California contractor license; applicants should use the City's "Who Can Pull A Permit" handout and permit staff guidance to confirm who may sign and pull the permit for the specific scope.

Fees

Minimum permit fee
Building permit under $500 valuation is $212. Electrical/plumbing/mechanical permit issuance is $59 before itemized trade fees.
Plan check fee
Single-family residential plan check starts at $105 under $500 valuation; non-single-family plan check also starts at $105 under $500 valuation. Electrical, plumbing, and mechanical plan check is 100% of the permit fee. Grading expedited plan check surcharge is 50% of plan-check fees.
Permit fee formula
Building permit and building plan-check fees are generally valuation-based. Single-family and non-single-family building permits use separate valuation tables. Trade permits use flat/itemized schedules. Grading permits also use valuation-based schedules.
Trade permit fee
Building permit and building plan-check fees are generally valuation-based. Single-family and non-single-family building permits use separate valuation tables. Trade permits use flat/itemized schedules. Grading permits also use valuation-based schedules.
Payment note
Building fees follow the City's Master Fee Schedule and are collected as part of permit issuance/plan check. The City also publishes a refund policy: generally up to 80% of plan-check fees if review has not been performed and timely requested, and up to 80% of permit fees if work never commenced, no inspection occurred, and a timely abandonment request is approved.

Fees change. Verify current amounts at the official fee schedule.

Work That Does NOT Require a Permit

  • One-story detached accessory structures used as tool/storage sheds, playhouses, and similar uses not exceeding 120 square feet
  • Fences not over 6 feet high
  • Block walls and concrete fences not over 3 feet 6 inches high under El Segundo's local amendment
  • Oil derricks
  • Retaining walls not over 4 feet high unless supporting a surcharge or impounding certain liquids
  • Water tanks supported directly on grade if capacity does not exceed 5,000 gallons and height-to-diameter/width ratio does not exceed 2:1
  • Sidewalks and driveways not more than 30 inches above adjacent grade, not over a basement/story below, and not part of an accessible route
  • Painting, papering, tiling, carpeting, cabinets, countertops, and similar finish work
  • Temporary motion-picture, television, and theater stage sets and scenery
  • Prefabricated swimming pools accessory to Group R-3 occupancies that are less than 24 inches deep, do not exceed 5,000 gallons, and are installed entirely above ground
  • Shade cloth structures for nursery/agricultural purposes, excluding service systems
  • Swings and other playground equipment accessory to detached one- and two-family dwellings
  • Window awnings meeting the code's support/projection limits
  • Nonfixed and movable fixtures, cases, racks, counters, and partitions not over 5 feet 9 inches high

Important: Exemptions do not authorize work that violates other laws or ordinances. Separate permits may still be required for electrical, plumbing, mechanical, fire, zoning, public-works, accessibility, or utility work tied to the project.

Inspections

How to Schedule

Time windows
No public inspection-window schedule was found on the current City pages reviewed.

Typical inspection sequence: Typical sequence will depend on scope, but generally follows the adopted California codes and approved plans, such as foundation/setback verification for new construction, rough framing/MEP, insulation or other required in-progress inspections, and final inspection. El Segundo specifically requires licensed-surveyor setback certification for new construction before the first foundation inspection.

Additional Resources

Information on this page was last verified: March 2026. Permit rules and fees change — confirm current requirements directly with the City of El Segundo Community Development Department, Building and Safety Division before applying.

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Important: This page is an educational resource provided by jaspector.com. It is not legal advice, and it does not substitute for official guidance from the permit authority listed above. Permit requirements, fees, and processes change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with the issuing department before beginning any construction project. Use of this page does not create an attorney-client relationship. Jaspector assumes no liability for any outcomes arising from reliance on this information.

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